-
- Brazil's National Water Agency (ANA) director Jerson Kelmann, was quoted in Gazeta de Povo on June 12 stating that Brazil may face a water shortage if the government's energy rationing program fails. Rationing began June 1 due to a lack of water in reservoirs that supply hydroelectric power plants. But Sao Paulo state energy secretary Mauro Arce, who is also a member of Brazil's electric energy crisis management team (CGCE), rejected Kelmann's warning, stating that water companies would not have their power cut, although they will have to cut back energy consumption by 10%.
- Brazil's potable water and sewerage sector needs some US$16bn through 2010, according to a report by international rating company Fitch, IBCA and Duff & Phelps reported in local paper Valor Economico. Only 37.5% of the population has sewerage service, while in states such as Rondonia and Mato Grosso the percentage barely reaches 1%, according to Fitch and government data, while 92.7% have water access, although 38.1% is lost due to the antiquated infrastructure. "It is clear that the government does not have the sufficient resources to make all the necessary investments," according to Fitch president Rafael Guedes, commenting that private sector participation is still small due to the lack of clear rules. In addition, the country's rates policy needs to be more clearly defined for the investor, as current rates are not sufficient to cover operating costs, Guedes said.
- Brazil's sewerage infrastructure will require between US$1.05bn and US$2.1bn annually for at least 10 years to meet future demand, according to the Environment Ministry's water resources secretary Raymundo Garrido, quoted in Jornal Cruzeiro do Sul (Brazil) on June 13. Currently just 18% of urban sewage is treated, Garrido said, adding that since 1998 investment in this sector is stopped.
- Rio de Janeiro state waterworks company Cedae signed an agreement with Rio de Janeiro Water Resources & Sanitation Department to transfer more than US$140,000 to the city of Rio de Janeiro to ensure the maintenance and operation of 21 sewage treatment plants, the state government announced on June 7. An impasse between Cedae and Rio city authorities had left the plants, which service some 240,000 residents in 32 low-income communities, idle. As a result, some 500 liters per second of untreated sewage was flowing into Guanabara Bay, Barra da Tijuca and other water bodies. The impasse stemmed from an agreement signed last year between state governor Anthony Garotinho and former Rio city mayor Luiz Paulo Conde. That agreement called for the city to manage the treatment stations, and in exchange Cedae would pay maintenance costs of some US$1.1mn through this past June. Although payment was received for July-August 2000, non-payment reached US$221,000 by December, according to Rio city water entity Fundacao Municipal Rio Aguas. The remaining funds are to be transferred monthly until year end.
On June 25 Cedae inaugurated the US$31.2mn, 5,000 liter per second (lps) Alegria sewage treatment plant. Alegria is the largest project in the country's Guanabara Bay clean up program (PDBG). Sewage treatment stations Pavuna and Sarapui - inaugurated last December with 1,000 lps capacity each - are also part of the PDBG and along with Alegria make up 70% of the program's US$750mn first phase. The Inter-American Development Bank, the Japan Bank for International Cooperation and local counterpart funds, are financing this first phase that goes through 2003. In August, Cedae started a feasibility study for phase two of PDBG. Japan's International Cooperation Agency (JICA) approved US$1.3mn financing in June to carry out the study, which will determine whether phase two will be technically and financially viable. Cedae has also opened a public consultation period to receive opinions on an 11-point draft outline of phase two action areas. Phase two, scheduled to begin in 2004, will focus on industrial pollution remediation and seeks to modernize all companies that dump waste into Guanabara.
Cedae made bidding rules available on July 10 to carry out a development plan for two sewerage projects to help clean up Sepetiba bay. The company selected to carry out the US$1.13mn study will have 10 months to develop sewerage systems for Guandu Mirim and Sepetiba 2. Guandu Mirim will benefit neighborhoods Santissimo, Campo Grande, Senador Vasconcelos, Inhoaiba and Cosmos with 444km of collection network and two treatment stations, with capacities of 400 liters per second (lps) and 1,000lps, respectively. Sepetiba 2 will benefit Santa Cruz and Paciencia with 154km of collection network, 18km of interceptors and a 1,200lps treatment station.
Cedae increased rates 14.8% in August in order to offset supply costs. The company bills some US$32mn per month. Cedae services 66 of Rio state's 91 municipalities with 14,000km of potable water and 5,000km of sewerage networks, which benefit over nine million and five million residents, respectively.
- On June 13, the Finance & Tax Committee of Brazil's House of Representatives approved a US$379mn financing package from the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) for five environmental sanitation projects. The five projects that would benefit would be: (1) the Ilha de Sao Luis environmental sanitation program (US$56.5mn); (2) the country's sanitation modernization project (US$93mn); (3) a water resource development program for semi-arid areas (US$29.5mn); (4) the Jacarepagua environmental recovery program (US$151mn); and (5) an environmental conservation project for Caatinga (US$50mn).
- At the end of August, a proposed amendment to Brazil's Sanitation Bill was presented to a special congressional commission that would shift the balance of power in the water sector to municipalities and away from state waterworks companies. Adolfo Marinho, federal lower house member for Ceara state, and part of the government's PSDB party, presented his report on August 28 after six months' investigation, and has substantially altered the government's original proposal, according to the lower house news service, Agencia Camara. The changes are needed to bring the bill in line with the Brazilian constitution, Marinho said.
As a result of the complicated changes, the government is likely to be pressured into removing the bill's urgent tag and the final vote - originally scheduled for September 14 - will likely be delayed.
The modifications also give municipal representatives two-thirds of the votes on the Deliberative Council that will monitor the sector, instead of the original proposal of a 50:50 split between states and municipalities.
Ariovaldo Carmignani, president of Sao Paulo state's waterworks company Sabesp and president of state waterworks association Aesbe said he opposed the modifications, as they would require waterworks companies to make 70% of total investments while municipalities would receive 100% of the revenues. This compounds the current situation, where many municipal water companies receive services without paying for them, he added.
- On June 19, international credit rating agency Moody's rated the issue of US$30mn (R$74mn) in one-year commercial paper by water company Sanepar, which operates in the Brazilian state of Parana, investment grade. The agency's rating outlook for the company is stable. A big boost to the investment grade rating comes from Sanepar's expectations that it will generate EBITDA of over US$140mn (R$350mn) in each of the next four years. Sanepar provides water and sewerage services to municipalities under long-term concession agreements. The company serves a population of over 7.5 million customers throughout the state of Parana. The company's voting shares are held 60% by the state of Parana and 39.7% by Domino Holdings, which is made up of Vivendi Environment, Andrade Gutierrez Concessoes, Opportunity Dalleth and Parana's state-controlled electric power company Copel.
- Sanepar invested US$46mn on waterworks from September 1996 to April 2001 as part of the state's US$400mn urban development plan that involved 3,799 projects. Some US$24mn was spent on potable water expansion works in 72 municipalities, and another US$22mn on 45 municipal sewerage systems. The Inter-American Development Bank put up US$249mn of the total, while the state and municipal governments provided the rest.
- Brazil's water sector is one of the areas UK companies are interested in, according to the director general of the 3,000-member Confederation of British Industry, Digby Jones, who was quoted by O Globo (Brazil) on June 21. He was speaking before Rio de Janeiro's CRJ commerce association. The UK's Thames Water is one company that has been eyeing several Brazilian water sector sell-offs scheduled for this year, with Bahia state water utility Embasa topping the list. Embasa is the most advanced of all the Brazilian waterworks privatization processes underway, Thames Brazil country manager Emilio Gabbrielli stated. The company "has all the characteristics to make it a priority target for us" and is made more attractive by the high degree of political consensus between the state government and municipal authorities, he said. Thames, which was recently taken over by German services giant RWE, has already formed an alliance with Portugal's EDP to participate in Brazilian water sector auctions.
- French-owned waterworks company Ondeo Services is looking for partners for its Manaus concession in Brazil's Amazonas state, country manager Newton de Lima Azevedo announced on July 3 in the Brazilian press. Ondeo plans to invest between 500mn and 600mn reais (US$217mn-260) in Manaus during the 30-year concession to improve water services, he added. The company also holds a concession to provide water services to the city of Limeira in Sao Paulo state, under a 50:50 joint venture with Brazilian construction company Odebrecht.
- Brazil's Federal District (DF) waterworks company Caesb expects to have its master plan ready by year-end or early 2002. The plan is part of a US$260mn basic sanitation program for the DF, which includes capital Brasilia and surrounding areas. The Inter-American Development Bank is providing US$130mn, approved last December, while local funds total US$130mn. The master plan will complement current Caesb efforts, such as an initiative to treat 100% of sewage and provide potable water to all DF residents by end-2002. Some US$47mn is being spent this year on waterworks. Meanwhile, work on sewage treatment stations Gama (US$5.52mn) and Taguatinga-Ceilandia (US$18.8mn), with treatment capacities of 544 and 2,495 liters per second respectively, should begin by year-end. Last year the company posted a net profit of R$9.03mn (US$4.3mn), following earnings of R$2.43mn in 1999 and a R$5.9mn loss the previous year.
- Rio Grande do Sul state waterworks company Corsan is investing some US$37mn this year in potable water and sewage works, and is also involved in the US$220mn first phase of the state's 20-year Pro-Guaiba environmental management program, scheduled to finish July 2002.
In August, Corsan announced in the local press that increased connections and the implementation of a water meter campaign increased their 1H01 profit 181% from the same period last year to some US$5.6mn Net revenues increased 2.45% in 1H01 to some US$97mn, while 1H01 operating costs fell 6.12% to some US$33mn.
Also in August, Corsan announced that it would increase rates 16.78%, and that it was going to issue some US$40mn in simple non-convertible debentures to help finance potable water and sewerage works.
- Brazil's government will charge waterworks concessionaires between R$0.01 and R$0.02 per cu. m. (approximately US$0.005-US$0.01) for water next year, according to reports in the local press in late June. The measure is meant to promote rational water use in the face of the country's energy crisis, which stems from a lack of investment in non-hydroelectric generation projects, exacerbated by low rainfall that has left hydroelectric reservoirs at less that a third of capacity, in a country where 90% of generating capacity relies on this source. The charge will affect some 9 million residents in the interior of Sao Paulo state and some 2 million in Rio de Janeiro state, areas fed by the Paraiba do Sul river basin. Ceara state already charges for water use.
- Bahia state waterworks company Embasa will be sold by the end of November, barring unforeseen circumstances, according to officials at development bank Desenbanco. The auction could happen as early as September or October. The sale process is being managed by Brazil's National Development Bank (BNDES), together with Desenbanco and a number of private sector advisors in the Sanebahia consortium. At the same time, Embasa will be awarded a concession to operate water services in the region, probably for between 20 and 30 years.
Details of the bidding rules are being finalized and Desenbanco is awaiting a final report from the Sanebahia consortium, which was awarded the advisory contract. Bidding rules and a minimum price will then be released, probably sometime in September.
Desenbanco and Brazil's National Development Bank (BNDES) completed a European road show at the end of July. They visited seven companies in four countries: Thames Water and Anglian Water in the UK, Ondeo and Vivendi in France, Aguas de Portugal and Eletricidade de Portugal, and Spain's Iberdrola.
Embasa's operational income was 399mn reais (some US$161mn at today's rate) last year, and services close to 7.2 million residents in 345 municipalities, 270 of which have agreed to continue with Embasa after the sale, while 65 were to decide by August 15 if they will continue with the company.
- Brazil's 2001-2002 privatization program (PND) also includes Pernambuco state waterworks company Compesa, Rio Grande do Norte's Caern and Espirito Santo's Cesan.
- Brazil's Sao Paulo state water and energy resource management agency DAEE expects to select in mid August the winner of a tender to enlarge the Tiete River. The last week in July, DAEE qualified six of the 16 groups that delivered pre-qualification documents. The enlargement is part of state waterworks company Sabesp's US$400mn second stage cleanup of the Tiete watershed that drains Sao Paulo's metropolitan area, which the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) is helping finance. Sabesp began soliciting tenders for second stage projects last December. Stage II is expected to raise treated sewage rate in the metropolitan area to 48-55% and connect 400,000 more households to the system.
According to local press reports, Sabesp will invest some US$43mn in the next three years on information technology infrastructure. Some US$35.5mn of the investment is for the installation of enterprise resource planning (ERP) information technology. Sabesp is in the final stages of calling for supply bids, and should complete the process by year-end. Another US$8mn will go towards a geographic information system (GIS), which the World Bank is supporting.
Sabesp ruled out extending its current water rationing plans in the metropolitan region of Sao Paulo state in September. Rainfall picked up in August, meeting historic average levels, which helped stabilize the fragile reservoir system after months of low rainfall, Sabesp explained in a statement. Rainfall in September is expected to remain high, the company added. Sabesp also pointed out that the system has been helped by investments in water management systems and water usage campaigns have helped reduce consumption.
- Santa Catarina state waterworks company Casan will spend a little over US$9mn to install 400,000 water meters in the next 14 months, in an effort to reduce the current 32% water loss rate.
In late August, representatives from French group Suez (now Ondeo) and Dutch company Nuon Global Water Solution met with Santa Catarina authorities to express their interest in purchasing Casan shares, after the state's Legislative Assembly approved in May the sale of state power distributor Celesc's 19% stake in Casan. The sale is scheduled for September on the Sao Paulo stock market (Bovespa). In July Casan announced it is drafting a tender model that would allow private sector partnerships to help carry out sewerage works in coastal localities. The consulting company that is drafting the model should have it ready this month.
- Brazil's Pernambuco state waterworks company Compesa will have to invest some US$793mn in the next 15 years to increase potable water and sewerage coverage in the state, local paper Jornal de Comercio reported on August 20. The investment figure is the result of a preliminary study carried out by Compesa, along with national development bank BNDES and two consortia hired to carry forward the company's privatization process. Compesa's goals and investment plans should be ready by year-end.
- Ceara state waterworks company Cagece is expected to begin a phase two sewerage master plan in 2H02 that will guide all sewerage works in the state for the next 20 years, local paper Diario do Nordeste reported in late August. Some US$395mn will have to be invested in the next three years, according to Cagece president Ednardo Rodrigues. The Inter-American Development Bank (IDB) is expected to finance Sanear II with some US$200mn, although Ceara state authorities had asked the IDB for US$330mn.
According to August reports in the Gazeta Mercantil, the Ceara state government will invest a total of US$245mn (620mn reais) to connect water basins across the state. The International Bank for Reconstruction & Development (IBRD) will provide loans totaling 55% of the project financing, while the country's national development bank BNDES will provide loans worth 25% and the state government will cover 20% from its own resources. The largest single project will cost some US$158mn (400mn reais), and will allow water to be transported 220km from the Castanhao reservoir to the metropolitan region of Fortaleza. As part of this interconnection, the Ceara state government has already awarded a US$56.3mn (143mn reais) contract to a consortium led by Portugal's Somague Engenharia to build a 53.7km canal connecting water basins in the state. The government will offer two more contracts totaling US$103mn (260mn reais) to construct two further sections of the Castanhao/Fortaleza connection. The first contract will be put out to tender in October and the second in January.
- Local press reported in late August that Brazil's National Water Agency (ANA) will invest approximately US$51mn to improve water catchment from the Piracicaba, Capivari and Jundiai river basin, and build sewerage treatment stations, which will benefit 58 cities in Sao Paulo state.
- A World Bank (WB) team was to arrive in Brazil the last week in August to discuss the final details of a US$130mn financing package, which would be applied to the second phase of the government's waterworks sector modernization program PMSS-II, local paper O Estado de Sao Paulo reported. The package would allocate US$30mn to national development bank BNDES that would provide credit to waterworks concessionaires; US$20mn to the President's urban development special entity to help states and municipalities structure their services; and US$80mn for federal state bank Caixa Economica Federal, which will help state waterworks companies.
- On August 24, it was announced that the Minas Gerais state legislative assembly approved an amendment to the regional constitution that complicates the privatization of state waterworks company Copasa and integrated power company Cemig. The amendment makes privatization of the two companies conditional on obtaining 80% approval for a specific law from Miinas Gerais state assembly members. Privatization plans would then have to be approved by a referendum. Copasa provides potable water to some 9.9 million residents and sewerage service to some 4.4 million residents.
-
- In early June, Chile's construction institute formed a committee to explore possible financing sources for the government's US$612mn rainwater collection master plan for capital Santiago, El Mercurio (Chile) reported. Due to the high cost, authorities are looking to form alliances with private companies, particularly water utilities, to take on investment, which they would recoup through extra water rates.
In late August, the Hydraulic Works Directorate of Chile's Public Works Ministry (MOP) released bidding rules for a feasibility study for the definitive design of a primary rain catchment network system around the Las Cruces stream in the north of capital city Santiago. Companies should present background information from September 10-21, and submit inquires by October 5. Technical offers are due October 24 and economic offers October 31. The Directorate has also published bidding rules for a consultancy contract to design works for a flood and sediment control project in the Zanjon de la Aguada stream in the east of Santiago. Rules are available through September 4, while technical offers are due September 28, and economic offers are due October 5.
- Chile's Region VI water utility Essel launched auctions for a series of construction contracts at the beginning of June, El Mercurio (Chile) reported. Auction A is for upgrading the Chepica drinking water system. Auction B is for drilling and installing pump facilities for the Estanque La Virgen in the Mostazal municipality. Auction C is for expanding the Requinoa sewerage network. Bidding rules were on sale from June 5-13 and offers were opened on June 22. Essel, controled by UK-based Thames Water, will finance the work.
- Some 15-20 companies and consortia delivered pre-qualification documents to French engineering firm Degremont to build the US$315mn La Farfana wastewater plant in Chilean capital Santiago. Bids and technical offers will be due mid-September and the winner selected October-November. Works will begin immediately, with the plant expected to come online by end-2003. Santiago water utility Emos awarded Degremont the technology and global management contract for the treatment plant earlier this year. The company is responsible for La Farfana's engineering and equipment supply, and the auctioning of civil works and project management, as well as the operation of the plant for a year once it is completed. In a parallel process, Emos made bidding rules available in May for a contract to provide engineering services and supervise technical works at the plant.
Emos made bidding rules available through August 22 for an international tender to incorporate advanced management and operations systems and procedures into four areas. The areas are the operation and management area of water's integral cycle in large urban areas; strategic and business management; technical information and management information systems; and hydrology, hydraulics and engineering. Rules cost some US$1,445, with offers due October 16. Spain's Agbar and France's Suez control 54.2% of Emos, and the Chilean government's business development corporation Corfo 44.2%, while workers and minority shareholders hold the rest. Emos will soon change its name to Aguas Andinas.
On September 4, Emos announced that bidding rules were available for companies interested in participating in the construction of discharge works for the US$315mn La Farfana wastewater plant. Companies must deliver background documents by September 28.
Emos posted profits of US$27mn in the first quarter, 60% up on same-period last year, and plans to invest US$2.65bn through 2010.
- On July 6, Chile's state business administrator (SAE) launched auctions for concessions to operate Region VII and IX water utilities Essam and Essar. Bidding rules for prequalification were published in local newspapers. Bice Chile Consult and N.M. Rothschild & Sons were selected to draw up the concessions.
SAE director Felipe Sandoval told journalists on August 14 that fourteen companies and consortia bought bidding rules for 30-year concessions to operate Essam and Essar. The following purchased bidding rules for both concessions: Anglian Water; Inversiones Aguas Metropolitanas; Thames Water; Essbio; Aquamundo; Inversiones Cascal; Fomento de Construcciones y Contratas and Compagnie Generale des Eaux (in partnership with Proactiva Medio Ambiente for Essar); Sacyr Chile and AGS; and Inversiones Iberaguas. Essam's bidding rules buyers also included: Inima Servicios Europeos de Medio Ambiente; IECSA Chile and ACEA; and Aguas de Bilbao. The Agua Azul de la Araucania consortium purchased rules just for the Essar concession.
Bids are due in the first half of October and award is slated for December, according to the SAE. SAE expects to complete the process and transfer the concessions to the private operators in January-February of 2002. Required investment in Essam over the next 10 years is estimated at US$100mn, according to Essam chairman Romy Rebolledo, while her counterpart at Essar, Jazmin Balboa, said the company would require some US$116mn over five years.
Concessions to operate Chile's remaining water utilities will be awarded next year once the Essam and Essar processes have been completed. The date for delivering offers will be published in the local press.
Essam will invest US$130mn over the next 10 years to build eight new potable water plants and 22 wastewater treatment plants, and consolidate its sewerage network, according to SAE.
- On June 13, the feasibility study was ready for Chile's second "mega-irrigation project" consisting of a reservoir connected to the Nuble river in Region VIII, La Nacion (Chile) reported. "What we are proposing is to build a US$200mn reservoir in the Punilla area with a capacity for 600 million cu.m and potential for power generation," hydraulic works department director Eduardo Bartholin said. The Finance Ministry will consider providing funds for the project, which Bartholin said will probably be awarded as a concession. The first irrigation concession was awarded in April this year for the El Bato reservoir in Region IV.
- Chilean waterworks company Esval, which serves the Valparaiso Region, is planning to invest US$68mn this year to expand and improve services, El Mercurio (Chile) reported on June 15. Some 2,000 jobs will be created as a result, according to Kevin Starling, Latin America director of Britain's Anglian Water Group, which controls Esval. The company plans the construction of four wastewater treatment plants in San Felipe, Los Andes, La Ligua and Quillota. These plants will cost some US$8.2mn. A further US$35.67mn will go to providing drinking water facilities, US$28.17mn to wastewater treatment and US$6.23mn to general administrative expenses.
- The concession process for Chilean waterworks company Essat is "irreversible," according to statements made by Felipe Sandoval, director of the country's state business administrator, the SAE, on June 22. Essat's concession process has come under fire from company workers, who argue jobs will be cut and water rates increased, views shared by deputy Antonella Sciaraffia and senate candidate Fernando Flores, local paper La Estrella de Iquique reported. Earlier this year the government decided to incorporate private capital into the remaining state water utilities through a concession mechanism rather then selling off controlling stakes in the companies, as was the case with the country's five largest water utilities.
- Chile's Region VI water utility Essel, controlled by the UK's Thames Water, expects to have ready in September a tentative list of companies that it will invite to participate in future works. In May Essel published an announcement calling on contractors and consultants to purchase registration documents to be included in a company registry. Registration is divided into two lots: 1) hydraulic and sanitary civil works, operations maintenance and quality control; and 2) planning and feasibility, basic engineering studies, civil engineering, inspections, operations, quality control and other studies.
Meanwhile work continues in full force at Essel's US$17mn wastewater treatment plant in regional capital Rancagua, which is expected to begin operations by year-end. The plant is part of Essel's five-year, US$80mn investment program. Essel awarded the civil works for the plant's construction to the Chilean subsidiary of Brazil's Mendes Junior. United States-based suppliers Ashbrook will install equipment from mid-2001 at the plant and handle the facility's first nine months of operations.
- Chilean power company Gener, which was recently acquired by US-based AES, abandoned the sale of its 51% share in sanitation works Explotaciones Sanitarias and Ecogener, according to local paper reports in late June. Three bids were received but, according to sources within Gener, these were deemed "unsatisfactory." The three bidders were believed to be Emos (Chile), Biwater (UK) and Vivendi (France).
- Chile's water utilities posted positive earnings in 1Q01, up significantly on same-period last year, local newspaper Estrategia reported on June 18. Returns on assets in the three month period reached 13%, up 0.5 percentage points, according to waterworks regulator SISS. These were calculated in terms of operational profits on all assets. Operational profits in the sector increased from US$61.3mn to US$67mn over the two periods. Net profits compared to total assets also reached 13%, compared to 11.4% in same-period 1999. SISS attributed the positive results to improved efficiency in the sector, much of which was privatized last year, as well as more water sold and higher rates charged.
- Chile's central Region V waterworks company Esval, controlled by the UK's Anglian Water, is investing some US$64mn this year on 250 projects. The works include the construction and expansion of wastewater collectors in greater Valparaiso that will benefit more than 100,000 residents.
Esval released bidding rules on June 19 for the construction of three compact secondary wastewater treatment plants for coastal localities Zapallar, Cachagua and La Laguna, and for the construction of a 1,000 cu. m. capacity water tank in locality Rinconada de Los Andes. Offers for both sets of works were due August 9.
- Chile's Public Works Ministry (MOP) launched a tender on August 12 for a US$8mn remediation project for the El Morro channel in Region VIII port town Talcahuano. The announcement was published in the federal register equivalent and in local press. The project is to build a 3km, 50m-wide channel to increase drainage velocity and rain collectors. Special emphasis is being placed on the final disposal of the contaminated material that will be dredged from the channel floor. Interested companies must be registered with the MOP.
- Chilean House of Representatives member Patricio Walker, of the Christian Democratic (DC) party that is part of the ruling government coalition, has asked President Ricardo Lagos to suspend the concession process of Region IV state water utility Essco, local paper El Mercurio reported on August 20. According to Walker, Essco is an example of efficient state management that last year earned the government some US$4.4mn. Walker further commented that there is a lack of confidence in turning state-run water utilities over to the private sector due to increased rates, such as the case of Emos in capital Santiago and Esval in Region V. Essco, along with Essat (Region I), Essan (II), Emssat (III), Essco (IV), Emssa (XI) and Esmag (XII) are the remaining water utilities in state hands, whose concession processes will be drafted after Essam (VII) and Essar's (IX) concession process finish in January/February of next year.
- A bill that would modify Chile's 1981 water code is being finalized and should become law by year-end or early 2002, the General Water Directorate (DGA) of Chile's Public Works Ministry (MOP) announced in late August. The modifications seek to ensure that water is used in productive projects and that requested water flows correspond effectively to the needs for which they were requested.